Finals: Jon Finkel (USA) vs. Bob Maher, Jr. (USA)
In a battle of Magic titans, Jon Finkel, the greatest player in the history of Magic: the Gathering, defeated Bob Maher three games to two. Playing nearly identical decks, the two friends, both of whom had previously won Pro Tours, played the maximum number of games to decide who would join Tommi Hovi as the only players to ever win more than one premiere level event.
more...

Team Finals Playoff : Ryan Fuller (Canada) vs. Jon Finkel (USA)
An exciting one match playoff will determine the 2000 Worlds Team Competition winner. And what better representative for the United States than Jon Finkel. Ryan Fuller isn't so shabby either and has had a great weekend himself and is looking to build on his fellow Canadians' wins and pull off a major upset.
more...

Team Finals: Gab Tsang (Canada) vs. Frank Hernandez (USA)
In what looked to be Team Canada's best match up, Pro Tour veteran Gab Tsang faced off against newcomer Frank Hernandez in a dual of National team third chairs. The match up, which judging by the archetypes would normally favor Hernandez, looked good for Tsang because of a sideboard loaded with Submerges and Somnophores, both excellent cards against the American's deck.
more...

Aaron Forsythe (USA) vs. Sam Lau (Canada)
Both players finished 4th at their respective Nationals. Aaron is using a red/green deck dubbed Angry Hermit, made of beatdown creatures and Land Destruction. Sam Lau is running Accelerated Blue, a fairly famous monoblue deck featuring Morphlings and Masticore and taking its name from Grim Monolith.
more...

Team Finals

Frank Hernandez (USA) vs. Gab Tsang (Canadian)

by Gary Wise

In what looked to be Team Canada's best match up, Pro Tour veteran Gab Tsang faced off against newcomer Frank Hernandez in a dual of National team third chairs. The match up, which judging by the archetypes would normally favor Hernandez, looked good for Tsang because of a sideboard loaded with Submerges and Somnophores, both excellent cards against the American's deck.

Game one, in which Hernandez would not have to face Tsang's vicious sideboard, went well for the Florida native. After Tsang mulliganed, Hernandez, playing first, came out strong with a first turn Wild Dog which he Rancored on turn two, attacking for 4. With an end-of-turn Vine Dryad having joined the fray, Frank was obviously on the offensive. While Gab's 2nd and third turn Powder Kegs helped, when Frank played both the original Rancor and a recently drawn one on the Dryad with Gab at 5 life, there was nothing the Juggernaut could do but conceed.

Hernandez

Game two saw Tsang, playing first this time, mulligan to six cards before playing his first Island. Frank's first turn Wild Dogs met an early demise when Tsang was able to Submerge in response to Rancor being cast.

Frank wasn't ready to quit just yet. Drawing the Dogs for the second time, he played a Gaea's Cradle along with the Dog and what seemed to be a dangerous River Boa. When he tried to Rancor up the Dog again, Gab was waiting with the second Submerge, after which he untapped, played a fifth land, cast Treachery on the Boa and played Somnophore. Frank played the game out, but to no avail as the match went to game 3

1-1

Game three was all Tsang. Frank came out quickly with a Pouncing Jaguar followed by an explosive second turn of Land Grant (showing his hand), Forest, two Rushwood Legates and a Llanowar Elf, leaving him an Elvish Lyrist and a Giant Growth. After Gab played a second turn Grim Monolith though, Frank was stymied by the all powerful Masticore.

Re-playing the Submerged Jaguar and the Lyrist, Frank had no choice but to charge on in with his creatures in the hope of outracing the 4/4 artifact creature, but it wasn't to be. Within two turns, Gab had killed all of Frank's creatures, and when Gab's Morphling joined the fray, it was over.